The <a href="http://www.alderneystones.com/index.html">Alderney Stones project</a> unveiled by the environmental artist <a href="http://www.rwc.uc.edu/artcomm/web/w2005_2006/maria_Goldsworthy/TEST/index.html">Andy Goldsworthy</a> on the British island of Alderney is an art piece about materials, space and perhaps most intriguingly, time. Eleven massive balls of local clay strung throughout the island are infused with found materials, and as the stones disintegrates the materials are reintroduced back into environment in subtle ways. If you’re a fan of Mr. Goldworthy’s <a href="http://inhabitat.com/art/">art</a> like we are then you’ll know how his best work is as much about process as it is about materiality and aesthetics.

1

Longis Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

The project took several years to create. Goldsworthy had chosen his site specific work in Alderney for the island’s mixture of differing environments and the quality of the soil.

2

Giffoine Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

The stones are placed in unexpected places and left to the whim of the site.

3

ALDERNEY STONES Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

They started as local clay soil trucked to a makeshift studio where a team worked at testing and building the massive clay spheres.

4

ALDERNEY STONES Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

Materials were located throughout the island which were incorporated into each stone-- like blackberries and barley.

5

ALDERNEY STONES Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

<a href="http://inhabitat.com/sinisa-kukec-transforms-trash-into-treasure/">Discarded</a> gloves, bricks and metal objects were also selected.

6

ALDERNEY STONES Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

The five foot diameter balls were then allowed to dry for a year before being moved. Each stone is placed in a site specific location where it will dissolve and eventually reveal its contents.

7

Andy Goldsworthy ALDERNEY STONES

A stone set on the shoreline will disappear in weeks, spreading the red clay bricks along the shore.

8

Blackberries Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

The stone infused with blackberries, will bleed the dark blue color and perhaps spring blackberry plants where it is placed in a field.

9

Bunker 62 Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

One stone, which had to be built inside a bunker because of its size, is now a template for the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/reverse-graffiti/">mischievous scratching</a> from visitors.

10

Haize Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

Another has become a massive cowlick.

11

Breakwater Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

Each stone is really a conversation with the setting about change, natural vs manmade and the materiality of land.

12

ALDERNEY STONES Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

The tension of seeing an unusual object set in an otherwise normal location is a specialty of Goldsworthy.

13

Fort Albert Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

His keen ability to find and manipulate ordinary natural or found materials and shape them into an uncanny experience helps us recognize the value of turning the unseen into the seen in the everyday.

14

1/14

Saye Beach Alderney Stones Andy Goldsworthy

The Alderney Stones project unveiled by the environmental artist Andy Goldsworthy on the British island of Alderney is an art piece about materials, space and perhaps most intriguingly, time. Eleven massive balls of local clay strung throughout the island are infused with found materials, and as the stones disintegrates the materials are reintroduced back into environment in subtle ways. If you’re a fan of Mr. Goldworthy’s art like we are then you’ll know how his best work is as much about process as it is about materiality and aesthetics.